Once again, the professional outrage machine on the left has chosen its target, and it’s not the violent criminal who stabbed two innocent Jewish men in north London.
Instead, their fury is directed [1] at the police officers who subdued him before anyone else could be killed.
The attack in Golders Green, carried out by a 45-year-old British national of Somali origin, ended when officers moved swiftly to neutralize the knife-wielding suspect.
But as usual, the activist class on social media decided the real villains were the cops who dared to stop the carnage.
Among the loudest voices was celebrity race agitator Shola Mos-Shogbamimu, who took to social media to accuse officers of “contemptible abuse of power.”
She was outraged that police were seen kicking the suspect in the head after he’d been tasered.
Her take ignored the small detail that this man had just stabbed two Jews in broad daylight and was still armed when police arrived.
To Shola, the fact that officers acted decisively in a life-or-death situation was somehow “disgusting.”
Then came Green Party leader Zack Polanski, another keyboard crusader who leapt to the suspect’s defense.
He lamented that Commissioner Mark Rowley’s officers had “violently kicked a mentally ill man in the head” as if the key detail of the day, two bleeding Jewish victims, were an afterthought.
For the left, the apparent crime was that officers didn’t politely ask the attacker to hand over the knife before inviting him to tea.
What these commentators refuse to grasp is simple: force in policing isn’t judged by the optics of a short Twitter clip.
It’s judged by necessity in the moment, when lives are hanging in the balance. Officers don’t have the benefit of hindsight or slow-motion replays.
They react to immediate, lethal threat with the tools and instincts they have. That reality is lost on people who’ve never been closer to real danger than their smartphone screens.
The left’s fixation on “gentler” tactics in the midst of violence reveals just how detached they are from how policing actually works.
In the real world, suspects don’t announce when a stabbing spree is over.
They don’t neatly surrender. They keep swinging.
And when officers must decide in seconds whether someone is still a threat, their job isn’t to look graceful, it’s to keep innocent people alive.
There’s also a grim cultural backdrop to this attack that the left tries to minimize.
The victims were visibly Jewish.
The area has a large Jewish community.
Authorities confirmed the suspect had previously been referred to the government’s Prevent counter-radicalization program.
These facts paint a clear picture: anti-Semitic violence motivated by extremist ideology. You’d think that would be the focus of outrage. Yet somehow, the activists’ tears are reserved for the assailant.
This moral inversion, where police are condemned more harshly than violent attackers, has become the left’s defining impulse.
They treat law enforcement like a threat and criminals like victims.
It’s an attitude that corrodes public safety and demoralizes the very people who stand between chaos and order.
The same activists howling about “excessive force” would be clutching their pearls if officers had hesitated and more people were stabbed.
And that hypocrisy points to a deeper problem: modern discourse treats policing as theater for social media.
Offenders become martyrs if the right hashtags line up. Outrage goes viral faster than facts ever can.
Every chaotic arrest gets flattened into a short clip stripped of all context, ready for the outrage economy to devour.
That’s not accountability—it’s mob manipulation.
The Metropolitan Police countered that distortion by releasing full body camera footage.
Once people saw the full sequence of events, the narrative collapsed.
It turned out that officers acted precisely as trained, under unimaginably tense circumstances. But don’t expect apologies or corrections from the Twitter mob.
They’ve moved on to their next moral crusade already.
To anyone grounded in reality, the situation in Golders Green is clear. Two Jewish men were stabbed.
Police arrived in seconds. They confronted an armed attacker. They took him down before he could kill anyone else. They all went home alive. That’s not a scandal, that’s effective police work. And it’s exactly what citizens rely on officers to do.
The left’s predictable outrage over this incident doesn’t reveal compassion or concern for justice.
It exposes the reflexive contempt they have for authority, order, and the people who risk everything to preserve both.
In their world, every criminal has an excuse, and every cop has a target on his back.
But in the real world, where knives draw blood and seconds can define life or death, we can be grateful that the police act first and get critiqued later.
Policing isn’t pretty, it isn’t polite, and it certainly isn’t performance art. It’s messy, it’s brutal, and it’s necessary.
The Golders Green officers did their job, and they did it well. The only disgrace here is the chorus of left-wing critics who can’t tell the difference between evil being stopped and evil being excused.